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The chief executive of an American airline company has said internal checks found “many” loose bolts on their Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes.

Ben Minicucci, the head of Alaska Airlines, told Sky News’s US partner network NBC News that he was “angry” about an incident on 5 January when a panel on one of the company’s planes blew out mid-air on a flight carrying 177 people.

“I’m more than frustrated and disappointed,” he said.

“I am angry. This happened to Alaska Airlines. It happened to our guests and happened to our people.

“My demand on Boeing is what are they going to do to improve their quality programmes in-house.”

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Flight suffers mid-air blowout

Mr Minicucci, who became president of Alaska Airlines in 2016, said he was “incredulous” that something like the 5 January incident could even happen.

It prompted new in-house inspections in Alaska Airlines which found more loose bolts.

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“I knew that this was an issue out of the [Boeing] factory,” he said. “There was no question in my mind.”

“And it’s clear to me that we received an airplane from Boeing with a faulty door. Now the NTSB [National Transportation Safety Board] investigation is going to figure out why that was a faulty door, whether it was bad installation, missing hardware, a manufacturing issue, but there’s no doubt that Alaska received an airplane off the production line with a faulty door,” he said.

After the panel blew out, the US Federal Aviation Administration ordered all Boeing Max 9 planes grounded and launched a safety investigation.

The agency announced an audit of Boeing’s Max 9 production line and suppliers “to evaluate Boeing’s compliance with its approved quality procedures”.

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It is also subjecting Boeing, as well as its third-party suppliers, to increased monitoring.

With no announcement on when Boeing-made planes can return to service, Alaska Airlines has spent weeks cancelling and rearranging its schedule, leaving thousands of passengers scrambling for flights.

United Airlines has also said it found additional loose bolts on its Max 9 planes.

Read more:
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How the Alaska Airlines flight went wrong

In a statement, Boeing said: “We have let down our airline customers and are deeply sorry for the significant disruption to them, their employees and their passengers.

“We are taking action on a comprehensive plan to bring these airplanes safely back to service and to improve our quality and delivery performance.

“We will follow the lead of the FAA and support our customers every step of the way.”

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GPT-4o: OpenAI to begin rollout of latest version of artificial intelligence chatbot

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GPT-4o: OpenAI to begin rollout of latest version of artificial intelligence chatbot

The new version of the ChatGPT AI chatbot has been unveiled and offers near-instant results across text, vision and audio, according to its maker.

OpenAI said it was much better at understanding visuals and sounds than previous versions.

It offers the prospect of real-time ‘conversations’ with the chatbot, including the ability to interrupt its answers.

The firm says it “accepts as input any combination of text, audio, and image and generates any combination of text, audio, and image outputs”.

GPT-4o is to be rolled out over the next few weeks amid a battle by tech firms to develop ever-more advanced artificial intelligence tools.

Monday’s announcement showed tasks such as real-time language translation; using its vision capability to solve a maths question on a piece of paper, and to guide a blind person around London.

GPT-4o can respond to audio in as little as 232 milliseconds, with an average of 320 milliseconds, which the company says is similar to human response time.

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To try to ease concerns over bias, fairness and misinformation, the Microsoft-backed company says the new version has undergone extensive testing by 70 external experts.

It comes after Google earlier this year had a major PR blunder over images generated by its Gemini AI system.

GPT-4o model will be free, but premium ‘Plus’ users get a greater capacity limit for messages.

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Previous versions of the chatbot have caused unease in schools and universities due to some students using it to cheat by producing convincing essays.

When it launched two years ago, ChatGPT was said to be the fastest-ever app to reach 100 million active monthly users.

The announcement also stole a march on Google, which is expected to tomorrow show off its own new AI features at its annual developers’ conference.

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Worshippers stop teenage boy armed with rifle from entering church full of children in Louisiana

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Worshippers stop teenage boy armed with rifle from entering church full of children in Louisiana

A 16-year-old suspect armed with a rifle has been stopped from entering a church full of children by worshippers during a livestreamed service, say authorities in Louisiana.

The boy tried to get into the St Mary Magdalen Church, in Abbeville, through the back door at around 10.30am on Saturday (4.30pm UK time), according to police.

A livestream of the incident that was seen by Sky News’ partner outlet NBC News showed a man approaching Reverend Nicholas DuPre after 48 minutes to whisper something.

Rev DuPre then stopped the service and asked churchgoers to pray with him, while some people were heard panicking and screaming.

Around 60 children were inside and waiting to take their first Holy Communion when worshippers confronted the armed suspect.

The Louisiana Catholic church said they then took him outside before calling the police.

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On the livestream, police officers could seen walking through the church, as boys ran across the altar and the clergy took shelter, NBC News reported.

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Someone was heard to say over a loudspeaker: “Guys, just get ahold of your children, go slowly. We did apprehend a child, he is in custody.”

In a statement, Abbeville Police Department said that upon arrival, officers arrested the suspect and then searched the church.

The force added the teenager was charged with terrorising the church and two counts of possession of a firearm by a juvenile.

Witnesses told TV station KADN that he was dressed all in black and armed with the rifle, NBC News reported.

Police chief Mike Hardy thanked the churchgoers who intervened for their “quick response and remaining calm throughout this matter”.

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The church also said it now plans to have uniformed law enforcement officers outside of its masses “out of an abundance of caution”.

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First victim in Jaws has died aged 77

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First victim in Jaws has died aged 77

The swimmer who was the first victim in the 1975 blockbuster Jaws has died. 

Susan Backlinie died in her home in California at the age of 77, according to her agent. Her death was first reported by The Daily Jaws website.

The opening scene of Steven Spielberg‘s classic features Ms Backlinie running along the beach and before diving into the water and skinny dipping.

The poster for the film Jaws. Pic: HA/THA/Shutterstock
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The poster for the film Jaws. Pic: HA/THA/Shutterstock

Her character Chrissie Watkins is then suddenly pulled under the water and she screams as she is violently attacked by an unseen great white shark.

Ms Backlinie had been a champion swimmer when cast in the film. She told The Palm Beach Post in 2015 that Spielberg told her: “When your scene is done, I want everyone under the seats with the popcorn and bubblegum.

“I think we did that,” she said.

In the documentary, Jaws: The Inside Story, Spielberg called Ms Backlinie’s sequence “one of the most dangerous” stunts he’s ever directed.

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“She was actually being tugged left and right by 10 men on one rope and 10 men on the other back to the shore, and that’s what caused her to move like that.”

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Ms Backlinie worked with Mr Spielberg again in the 1979 parody war film 1941, in which she spoofed her Jaws character.

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